scholarly journals Surface behaviour of gangliosides and related glycosphingolipids

1978 ◽  
Vol 171 (3) ◽  
pp. 559-565 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Maggio ◽  
F A Cumar ◽  
R Caputto

1. The surface behaviour of six different gangliosides and eight chemically related glycosphingolipids was investigated in monolayers at the air-water interface. 2. Mono-, di-, tri and tetra-hexosylceramides had force-area isotherms showing similar limiting molecular areas on 145 mM-NaCl, pH 5.6. The increasing number of negatively charged sialosyl residues in mono-, di- and tri-sialogangliosides induced a progressive increase in the liquid-expanded character of the films and in the limiting area occupied per molecule, owing to electrostatic repulsions. When the ganglioside monolayers were spread on subphases at pH 1.2, the limiting area per molecule was similar to that found for neutral glycosphingolipids. 3. The monolayer collapse pressure at pH 5.6 increased with the number of uncharged carbohydrate units up to when the polar head group contained 3-4 residues. For gangliosides the collapse pressures were lower and decreased from mono- to tri-sialogangliosides. Ganglioside monolayers on subphases at pH 1.2 showed increases in their collapse pressure. 4. The glycosphingolipid monolayers studied had various surface in their collapse pressure. 4. The glycosphingolipid monolayers studied had various surface potentials according to the complexity of the polar head group of the lipid. Attempts to calculate the dipolar contributions to the surface potential from each carbohydrate residue suggest that the second and third sialosyl residues in di- and tri-sialogangliosides contributed with a vertical dipole moment opposite to that of the first sialosyl residue.

1978 ◽  
Vol 175 (3) ◽  
pp. 1113-1118 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Maggio ◽  
F A Cumar ◽  
R Caputto

1. The interactions among five different gangliosides and three chemically related glycosphingolipids and their behaviour in mixed monolayers with six different phospholipids were investigated at the air/145 mM-NaCl interface at pH 5.6. 2. The mixed monolayers of any of the different gangliosides showed an immiscible behaviour at high surface pressures, with absence of interactions among them revealed by an ideal behaviour for mean molecular area and surface potential per molecule. 3. This behaviour was probably the consequence of steric hindrance and electrostatic repulsions between their polar head groups. 4. Di- and tri-sialogangliosides could be differentiated from neutral sphingolipids and monosialogangliosides on the basis of their interactions with phospholipids, which were correlated to the perpendicular electric field at the interface contributed by the carbohydrate residues. 5. The presence of the phosphocholine polar head group in phosphatidylcholine was important to establish interactions with di- and tri-sialogangliosides revealed by negative deviations from the ideal behaviour for mean molecular areas and mean surface potential per molecule. 6. The possible significance of these observations is discussed in relation to the participation of gangliosides in the organization of membranes and to their capability of inducing membrane fusion.


1980 ◽  
Vol 189 (3) ◽  
pp. 435-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno Maggio ◽  
Federico A. Cumar ◽  
Ranwel Caputto

1. The interactions of gangliosides with Ca2+ and some polar-head-group requirements for establishment of particular interactions with phosphatidylcholine were studied in monolayers at the air/145mm-NaCl interface. 2. Ganglioside–Ca2+ interactions, as revealed by surface-potential measurements, depended on the position occupied by sialosyl residues in the oligosaccharide chain. The interactions with Ca2+ of the single sialosyl residue of monosialogangliosides occurred above 0.1mm-CaCl2, whereas the interaction of the cation with additional sialosyl groups in di- or tri-sialogangliosides depended on the carbohydrate residue to which the sialosyl moiety was attached. The sialosyl residue bound in sialosyl–sialosyl linkage interacted very little with Ca2+. The sialosyl residue attached to the terminal galactose of the neutral tetrasaccharide chain interacted with Ca2+ above 1μm-CaCl2. 3. Experiments with mixed monolayers containing dihexadecyl phosphate and hexadecyltrimethylammonium indicated that for the occurrence of interactions of polysialogangliosides with phosphatidylcholine characterized by reductions in molecular packing and surface potential both charged groups of the phospholipid and sialosyl residues with particular dipolar properties in the ganglioside are participating. 4. Possible configurations that can explain the behaviour in monolayers were inspected with space-filling molecular models. The position of the carboxylate group of sialosyl residues with respect to the interface and to the sialosyl molecular plane can explain the different orientation of the dipole-moment vector of this residue, which depends on the position to which it is linked in the oligosaccharide chain. Favoured interactions of polysialogangliosides with phosphatidylcholine may result from a configuration allowing a partial matching of two oppositely oriented electrical vectors contributed by the zwitterionic phosphocholine group and particular sialosyl groups.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 3249-3268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federica Sebastiani ◽  
Richard A. Campbell ◽  
Kunal Rastogi ◽  
Christian Pfrang

Abstract. Reactions of the key atmospheric nighttime oxidant NO3 with organic monolayers at the air–water interface are used as proxies for the ageing of organic-coated aqueous aerosols. The surfactant molecules chosen for this study are oleic acid (OA), palmitoleic acid (POA), methyl oleate (MO) and stearic acid (SA) to investigate the effects of chain length, head group and degree of unsaturation on the reaction kinetics and products formed. Fully and partially deuterated surfactants were studied using neutron reflectometry (NR) to determine the reaction kinetics of organic monolayers with NO3 at the air–water interface for the first time. Kinetic modelling allowed us to determine the rate coefficients for the oxidation of OA, POA and MO monolayers to be (2.8±0.7) × 10−8, (2.4±0.5) × 10−8and (3.3±0.6) × 10−8 cm2 molecule−1 s−1 for fitted initial desorption lifetimes of NO3 at the closely packed organic monolayers, τd, NO3, 1, of 8.1±4.0, 16±4.0 and 8.1±3.0 ns, respectively. The approximately doubled desorption lifetime found in the best fit for POA compared to OA and MO is consistent with a more accessible double bond associated with the shorter alkyl chain of POA facilitating initial NO3 attack at the double bond in a closely packed monolayer. The corresponding uptake coefficients for OA, POA and MO were found to be (2.1±0.5) × 10−3, (1.7±0.3) × 10−3 and (2.1±0.4) × 10−3, respectively. For the much slower NO3-initiated oxidation of the saturated surfactant SA we estimated a loss rate of approximately (5±1) × 10−12 cm2 molecule−1 s−1, which we consider to be an upper limit for the reactive loss, and estimated an uptake coefficient of ca. (5±1) × 10−7. Our investigations demonstrate that NO3 will contribute substantially to the processing of unsaturated surfactants at the air–water interface during nighttime given its reactivity is ca. 2 orders of magnitude higher than that of O3. Furthermore, the relative contributions of NO3 and O3 to the oxidative losses vary massively between species that are closely related in structure: NO3 reacts ca. 400 times faster than O3 with the common model surfactant oleic acid, but only ca. 60 times faster with its methyl ester MO. It is therefore necessary to perform a case-by-case assessment of the relative contributions of the different degradation routes for any specific surfactant. The overall impact of NO3 on the fate of saturated surfactants is slightly less clear given the lack of prior kinetic data for comparison, but NO3 is likely to contribute significantly to the loss of saturated species and dominate their loss during nighttime. The retention of the organic character at the air–water interface differs fundamentally between the different surfactant species: the fatty acids studied (OA and POA) form products with a yield of  ∼ 20 % that are stable at the interface while NO3-initiated oxidation of the methyl ester MO rapidly and effectively removes the organic character ( ≤ 3 % surface-active products). The film-forming potential of reaction products in real aerosol is thus likely to depend on the relative proportions of saturated and unsaturated surfactants as well as the head group properties. Atmospheric lifetimes of unsaturated species are much longer than those determined with respect to their reactions at the air–water interface, so they must be protected from oxidative attack, for example, by incorporation into a complex aerosol matrix or in mixed surface films with yet unexplored kinetic behaviour.


2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (6) ◽  
pp. 519-528 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cuong V. Nguyen ◽  
Hiromichi Nakahara ◽  
Chi M. Phan

2012 ◽  
Vol 10 (0) ◽  
pp. 437-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Phan ◽  
H. Nakahara ◽  
O. Shibata ◽  
Y. Moroi ◽  
C. V. Nguyen ◽  
...  

Chemosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 254 ◽  
pp. 126918
Author(s):  
Aleksandar Tot ◽  
Ivana Maksimović ◽  
Marina Putnik-Delić ◽  
Milena Daničić ◽  
Slobodan Gadžurić ◽  
...  

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